2009
DOI: 10.1080/10904010903014442
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24 Hours in a Day: A Listening Update to the Time Studies

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Cited by 15 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…However, data on the amount of time teens and young adults spend in these pursuits are thin, often based on small samples (Hanson et al, 2010;Janusik & Wolvin, 2009;Kayany & Yelsma, 2000;Lauricella et al, 2014), over relatively brief time-spans (Hall, Kearney, & Xing, 2018), collected primarily for market research (GfK, 2014;JWT, 2012;Newell, Genschel, & Zhang, 2014), on only one type of media (Lenhart et al, 2015;Twenge & Park, 2018), or not updated every year (Common Sense Media, 2015), leading to outdated information (Rideout et al, 2010). Moreover, few studies track media use over the years among the same age-group using the same questions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, data on the amount of time teens and young adults spend in these pursuits are thin, often based on small samples (Hanson et al, 2010;Janusik & Wolvin, 2009;Kayany & Yelsma, 2000;Lauricella et al, 2014), over relatively brief time-spans (Hall, Kearney, & Xing, 2018), collected primarily for market research (GfK, 2014;JWT, 2012;Newell, Genschel, & Zhang, 2014), on only one type of media (Lenhart et al, 2015;Twenge & Park, 2018), or not updated every year (Common Sense Media, 2015), leading to outdated information (Rideout et al, 2010). Moreover, few studies track media use over the years among the same age-group using the same questions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, adolescents have engaged more and more with technology, spending hours online, on social media, texting, and gaming on electronic devices including smartphones and tablets (Lauricella, Cingel, Blackwell, Wartella, & Conway, 2014; Perrin, 2015; Rideout et al, 2010), activities that we define as “digital media.” As generations become more digitally native, their comfort level with (Van Volkom, Stapley, & Malter, 2013) and use of (Taipale, 2016; van den Berg, Arentze, & Timmermans, 2012) digital media increase relative to that of previous generations. However, data on the amount of time teens and young adults spend in these pursuits are thin, often based on small samples (Hanson et al, 2010; Janusik & Wolvin, 2009; Kayany & Yelsma, 2000; Lauricella et al, 2014), over relatively brief time-spans (Hall, Kearney, & Xing, 2018), collected primarily for market research (GfK, 2014; JWT, 2012; Newell, Genschel, & Zhang, 2014), on only one type of media (Lenhart et al, 2015; Twenge & Park, 2018), or not updated every year (Common Sense Media, 2015), leading to outdated information (Rideout et al, 2010). Moreover, few studies track media use over the years among the same age-group using the same questions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We focused on storytelling as a typical activity since teachers spend more than half of their class time on verbal instruction from elementary school to college school in different countries (Janusik and Wolvin, 2009 ) and it is often used as a teaching tool for organizational learning and received wisdom (Haigh and Hardy, 2011 ). Storytelling in elementary schools is usually done in one-to-many communication; a storyteller reads a picture book to many children, while Hugvie is used in one-to-one interactive communication (e.g., Minato et al, 2013 ; Sumioka et al, 2013 ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Multi-tasking in general, and media multi-tasking (also referred to as simultaneous media use) in particular, has been a part of the media experience for many years (McDonald & Meng, 2009) but has only recently gotten much research attention (Janusik & Wolvin, 2009;Jeong, Hwang, & Fishbein, 2010;Nielsen, 2010a). While time spent typically has been seen as an indicator of attention, the very idea of multitasking makes it clear that attention is not equivalent to time.…”
Section: Media Multi-taskingmentioning
confidence: 98%